Camelia M. Kuhnen

Latest Institution: National Bureau of Economic Research

All Institutions: University of North Carolina; National Bureau of Economic Research; Federal Reserve Board; University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.

Based on the Following Papers:

Exploration for Human Capital: Evidence from the MBA Labor Market

Year: 2015
Journal: Journal of Labor Economics
Authors: Camelia M. Kuhnen; Paul Oyer

Socioeconomic Status and Learning from Financial Information

Year: 2015
Journal: Journal of Financial Economics
Authors: Camelia M. Kuhnen; Andrei C. Miu

Noncognitive Abilities and Financial Delinquency: The Role of Self-Efficacy in Avoiding Financial Distress

Year: 2017
Journal: Journal of Finance
Authors: Camelia M. Kuhnen; Brian T. Melzer

Socioeconomic Status and Macroeconomic Expectations

Year: 2017
Journal: Review of Financial Studies
Authors: Sreyoshi Das; Camelia M. Kuhnen; Stefan Nagel

The Effect of Prior Choices on Expectations and Subsequent Portfolio Decisions

Year: 2017
Journal: No Journal Matched
Authors: Camelia M. Kuhnen; Sarah Rudorf; Bernd Weber

Expectations, Uncertainty, and Household Economic Behavior

Year: 2018
Journal: No Journal Matched
Authors: Itzhak Bendavid; Elyas Fermand; Camelia M. Kuhnen; Geng Li

Wealth and Insurance Choices: Evidence from U.S. Households

Year: 2021
Journal: No Journal Matched
Authors: Michael J. Gropper; Camelia M. Kuhnen


Author Disambiguation

This page includes results for all related names (only one name shown, no other authors with similar names):

Back to index